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/lit/ - Literature

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>> No.7034626 [View]
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[ERROR]

this guy no doubt fucks

>> No.5351152 [DELETED]  [View]
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5351152

Hey /lit/ I was hoping you could help me out. My brother needs to read more books for school and came to me for recommendations. I thought of this book I read a long time ago, but couldn't remember the name of it. It was a book about a school where someone vandalized the gym and nobody would say who did it so the school basically became a totalitarian regime run by the principal. It was sort of similar to The Wave but not really. Anyone know what the hell this book was called?

>> No.4944592 [View]
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4944592

>>4944578
> Not having at least read everyting of Shakespeare

>> No.4460573 [View]
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4460573

Am I the only one who has an alter dedicated to this person? Because I hope I won't be the only one in heaven.

>> No.4332673 [View]
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4332673

>>4332623
So, am I understanding this right that Stirner refers to as a "spook" the ideas that we create to understand the world and guide our action, with the word spook also implying that these things are unreal in nature? Sort of a complaint against synthetic truths? Perhaps suggesting that these things prevent us from properly perceiving reality?

Or is it closer to a Nietzsche type thing where he is just referring to ideas subconsciously absorbed from society and other sources of prejudice that prevent us from functioning properly/as we wish/as our true selves? Would the confines of Nietzsche conception of slave morality (if I remember correctly) be sort of similar to what Stirner refers to as spooks? From what I'm reading I'm leaning more towards the latter, I just don't have access to any of his actual works at this moment and was hoping for some clarification.

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